IUCN / SSC Cat Specialist Group - Digital Cat Library
   

 

View printer friendly
Jackson, R.M.; Wangchuk, R.
A community-based approach to mitigating livestock depredation by snow leopards
2005  Human Dimensions of Wildlife (9): 307-315

Livestock depredation by the endangered snow leopard (Panthera uncia) is an increasingly contentious issue in Himalayan villages, especially in or near protected areas. Mass attacks in which as many as 100 sheep and goats are killed in a single incident inevitably result in retaliation by local villagers. This article describes a community-based conservation initiative to address this problem in Hemis National Park, India. Human-wildlife conflict is alleviated by predator-proofing villagers' nighttime livestock pens and by enhancing household incomes in environmentally sensitive and culturally compatible ways. The authors have found that the highly participatory strategy described here (Appreciative Participatory Planning and Action APPA) leads to a sense of project ownership by local stakeholders, communal empowerment, self-reliance, and willingess to co-exist with snow leopards. The most significant conservation outcome of this process is the protection from retalitory poaching of up to five snow leopards for every village's livestock pens that are made predtor-proof.

PDF files are only accessible to Friends of the Cat Group. Joining Friends of the Cat Group gives you unlimited access and downloads in the Cat SG Library for one year, and allows you to receive our newsletter Cat News (2 regular issues per year plus special issues). More information how to join here

 

(c) IUCN/SSC Cat Specialist Group ( IUCN - The World Conservation Union)